Thursday, October 17, 2019

They got this decision wrong

Chicago Police Board votes to fire Robert Rialmo

The decision from the Chicago Police Board comes almost four years after he fatally shot Bettie Jones and Quintonio LeGrier on the West Side.

By Sam Charles Oct 17, 2019, 7:47pm CDT


Chicago Police Officer Robert Rialmo Max Herman/For the Sun-Times


The Chicago Police Board moved to fire Officer Robert Rialmo Thursday night, nearly four years after he fatally shot Quintonio LeGrier and Bettie Jones on the West Side.

The board voted 7-0 in favor of termination — with two members of the board recusing themselves — revealing its decision during their monthly meeting at Chicago Police headquarters in Bronzeville.

Testifying during his Police Board evidentiary hearings earlier this year, Rialmo said: “‘Tragedy’ is an understatement, in my mind, for what happened to Ms. Jones … She’s the victim.”

Shortly before 4:30 a.m. on Dec. 26, 2015 — just a month after the city released the Laquan McDonald shooting video — Rialmo and his partner were dispatched to the two-flat at 4710 W. Erie after several calls of a domestic disturbance came in to the city’s 911 center.Bettie Jones Provided photo

Quintonio LeGrier’s father had barricaded himself in his second-floor bedroom as his son, 19, was trying to get in with an aluminum baseball bat. LeGrier, a student at Northern Illinois University, was in the midst of a mental health episode and both he and his father had called 911.

The elder LeGrier had asked his downstairs neighbor, 55-year-old Bettie Jones, to open the door for officers when they got there.


When Rialmo and his partner arrived — Rialmo was standing on the front porch with his partner in the walkway — Jones motioned to the upstairs unit. Moments later, LeGrier came charging down the stairs with the bat.

What happened next has been the subject of much dispute. Attorneys for the LeGrier estate argued that Rialmo retreated several feet off the front porch as LeGrier came down the stairs. Rialmo testified that LeGrier took a swing at him with the bat as he stood on the porch, coming within inches of his head.

In any event, Rialmo opened fire, killing both LeGrier and Jones.Quintonio LeGrier Provided photo

CPD Supt. Eddie Johnson initially said he believed the shooting to be within department policy, despite the Civilian Office of Police Accountability ruling the shooting was unjustifiedand recommending Rialmo be fired. The disagreement meant that a single member of the board had to decide if the full board would hear the case. Board member Eva-Nina Delgado opted to move Rialmo’s case forward last year and, as is board policy, she was recused from the final vote. Another member of the board, John O’Malley, also recused himself from the vote.

Johnson filed several charges against Rialmo, a 30-year-old Marines veteran, last November. Those charges alleged action or conduct impeding department efforts to achieve its policy and goals or bringing discredit upon the department; disobeying an order or directive; inattention to duty; incompetency or inefficiency in the performance of duty; and unlawful or unnecessary use or display of a weapon.

Rialmo was faulted for shooting Jones, but not LeGrier. Both families sued Rialmo and the city, and the Jones estate reached a $16 million settlement. A Cook County jury initially awarded the LeGrier estate just over $1 million in summer 2018, but that was immediately nullified when jurors said, effectively, that the shooting was justified.

Part of Rialmo’s charges also stemmed from his failure to get recertified to carry a Taser before the day of the shooting. Before walking to the door of 4710 W. Erie, Rialmo left his baton in the police van that he and his partner drove to the LeGrier home. With his certification lapsed, he didn’t have a Taser, either.

However, Emanuel Kapelsohn, a firearms and use-of-force expert retained by both the city and Rialmo’s attorneys, testified in 2018 and earlier this year that neither a Taser nor a batonwould not have been an effective way to stop LeGrier.

Since the shooting, Rialmo has been involved in two bar scuffles. The first, which occurred in late 2017, resulted in Rialmo facing criminal battery charges. He was acquitted after a two-day trial in July 2018. Just a few days later, he was in another fight that was captured on cellphone video. The second remained under investigation by COPA as of Thursday, an agency spokesman said.

8 comments:

  1. Anonymous10/17/2019

    "LeGrier, a student at Northern Illinois University, was in the midst of a mental health episode and both he and his father had called 911." These are the times we live in. Monday morning quarterbacking after the fact, when an officer has to make a split second decision when dealing with a bat wielding psycho. Nobody should be surprised if a call for police service results in a case report "RD" number and advice to get a warrant and maybe a "have a nice day" from the officer as he leaves with no further police action taken. We're getting the police department we deserve. Congratulations to all of us.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10/18/2019

      Very, very, well said.

      Delete
  2. Anonymous10/17/2019

    And lets not forget the Reverend Phlem over at St. Sabina, appointing himself as the judge of what acquitted Officer Servin should be able to do with the rest of his life. How many people in the Auburn Gresham neighborhood have expired from unnatural causes since Phleger began his Al Sharpton routine at St. Sabina?

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  3. Anonymous10/17/2019

    He should be glad he's not in prision.

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  4. Anonymous10/17/2019

    Since Robert in not going back to work maybe he can grab a cps picket sign and make a difference.

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  5. Anonymous10/18/2019

    Give them the police department they so desperately want.

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  6. Anonymous10/18/2019

    Van Dyke shouldn't have resigned.

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  7. Anonymous10/19/2019

    Finally getting a police Department taxpayers deserve

    ReplyDelete